Eminent feminists

I have to write a couple of things around gender equality and International Women's Day and would like to reference key feminist thinkers, particularly women who advocated for access to education - then I realised I don't really know any apart from Germaine Greer.

I'd really appreciate some help. Sorry for my ignorance. Does Virginia Woolf count, with A Room of One's Own?

Simone de Beauvoir. Her book The Second Sex was very important not only when it came out in 1949 but ever since. It was her we have to thank for the insight that men - mankind - are the default human beings. They are mainstream, we are a side note. There's plenty more. A brilliant book.

Susan Brownmiller's book Against Our Will: an amazing and very wide reaching analysis of rape. Then there's Our Bodies Ourselves, the first book written to empower and enlighten women through understanding our bodies. First published under this title in 1971, it resulted in women in countless feminist groups examining their genitals with mirrors and a speculum. It provided information that, at the time, just wasn't available to women unless they were HCP.

Sojourner Truth who was born a slave in the US in the 19th century and escaped to become an advocate for women's rights and an abolitionist. She gave an impassioned speech about equality to some man who dared to say that women were more delicate than men (having lived as a slave, she knew a thing or two about having to survive).